Computing Facilities
Below are links to computing facilities that are available to our faculty, staff and
students. Please select a facility that you wish to obtain information for:
Labs
Facilities
Hardware
Software
| Labs | ||
| Room | Function | Equipment |
| C13 | SDP | 11 Windows 2000 PCs Marklin computer-controlled electric train set and dedicated computers. |
| C25 | UNIX lab | 16 Sun workstations (Shared with ECE) |
| C27 | Shared PC | 16 Dual-boot Linux/Windows 2000 PCs (Shared with ECE) C27 Lab. |
| C31 208/261/268 | lab | 8 Windows 2000 PCs Printer XESS XS-40 Boards with XILINX FPGA and 8031 Microcontroller Motorola MPC860 Power PC Development Boards CAD Software |
| C45 | SDP | 8 Windows 2000 PCs |
Engineering Computing Services (ECS)
The School of Engineering (SOE) Learning Center Computer Laboratories (LCCL) are located in the Engineering II Building. The laboratories have been managed by the Booth Research Center (BRC) since July 1, 1993. All systems (PIII and PIV PC Windows NT) are connected to the campus-wide network and the Internet.
University Information Technology Services (UITS)
The University of Connecticut Computer Center is located on the first floor of the Math Science Building. It is used extensively by students in Computer Science for course work and/or research requirements. Note that supercomputer facilities are also available through the Center.
Booth Engineering Center for Advanced Technologies (BECAT)
The Taylor L. Booth Engineering Center for Advanced Technologies maintains a modern set of networked laboratory facilities available to Computer Science and Engineering faculty and graduate students conducting research. These include several high performance computing systems and servers including the BECAT GRID which consists of over 24 nodes supporting grid and cluster middleware architectures. In addition to the BECAT GRID are numerous computing workstations which are available for small-scale and prototype research projects ranging in platforms from Solaris to Wintel to Linux.
The University of Connecticut Husky PC Program provides departments/schools an opportunity for an opportunity to purchase a standard personal computer configuration and associated support.
CSE's Microsoft Developer's Network Academic Alliance (MSDNAA) Program allows students taking courses in CSE to acquire and use certain Microsoft operating system and software development packages at no cost. For more information contact Howard Ellis.
UConns Microsoft Select Agreement is a contract between UConn, Microsoft, and Dell that provides UConn staff and faculty the ability to purchase Microsoft software at a reduced price. The software available in this contract is all software relating to Server Operating Systems, Desktop Operating Systems, and Applications.
Software listings provided by UConn ITS.
Information Technology Services provides updates on Computer and Network Security issues.